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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Nava
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/02/2007
2/25/2007 HB
SHORT TITLE High School Redesign
SB 561/aSEC/aSFC
ANALYST Aguilar
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
See Fiscal Implications $0.1
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB-584
Relates to HB-68, SB-211
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Department of Higher Education (HED)
Responses Not Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The Senate Finance Committee Amendment to Senate Bill 561 as amended removes
communication skills as a requirement for earning a New Mexico Diploma of Excellence, and
adds the choice of one unit of a career cluster course or workplace readiness.
The amendment also increases the number of electives that can be applied toward graduation.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
This amendment aligns SB-561 with all amendment made to HB-584. These bills were
originally introduced as duplicates.
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Senate Bill 561/aSEC/aSFC – Page
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Synopsis of SEC Amendment
The Senate Education Committee amendment to Senate Bill 561 makes changes to the title of the
bill, removes the requirement giving districts the option of charging student for subsequent
administration of the test.
The amendment allows for a parent to exempt their child from the mandatory attendance
requirements of statute by submitting written permission.
The amendment also adds science and social studies to minimum instructional areas in grades 1
through 3.
The amendment removes communication skills from the list of classes required for graduation
and increases the number of elective classes allowed. The amendment also allows parents to
exempt their child from the Algebra II requirement of the Diploma of Excellence and removes
the foreign language requirement.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
It appears that allowing parents to exempt students from the higher rigor classes may result in
students receiving a “Diploma of Excellence" who are not meeting the admission requirement of
many universities. The amendment provides that school districts offer foreign language classes
but does require they be taken.
The amendment also provides that schools offer dual credit courses as an honors course.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 561 integrates various components of high school redesign. The bill provides for
college and workplace readiness programs; clarifies language regarding assessments, creates a
college and workplace readiness assessment system; limits the use of funds in the Public School
Reading Proficiency Fund to middle, junior and high schools, raises the compulsory school
attendance age.
The bill further changes high school graduation requirements and establishes the New Mexico
diploma of excellence and provides the criteria required to earn the diploma.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
This bill provides for continuing appropriations. The LFC has concerns with including
continuing appropriation language in the statutory provisions for funds, as earmarking reduces
the ability of the legislature to establish spending priorities.
A significant requirement of this bill is for PED to create a readiness assessment system to
measure the readiness of every New Mexico high school student for success in higher education
or a career by the 2008-2009 school year. The assessment program consists of three components
as follows:
A ninth grade high school readiness assessment;
A tenth grade college readiness assessment; and,
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Senate Bill 561/aSEC/aSFC – Page
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An eleventh grade workplace readiness assessment.
The cost for the initial application of the test at each grade level will be at no cost to the student.
It is estimated that current assessment instruments with some modifications may be suitable to
meet the need of the ninth and tenth grade assessments. It appears that a new eleventh grade
assessment may be needed resulting in a substantial cost to the department. The bill provides
that PED may adopt an already-developed commercial assessment that can be customized and is
aligned to New Mexico content standards. While the extent of the alignment of the new
assessment to New Mexico’s academic content standards and benchmarks is unclear, the cost of
each administration is expected to be relatively inexpensive. The General Appropriations Act
contains $1.5 million for an eleventh grade exit assessment, some of which could possibly be
used for these efforts.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
SB 561 provides for increased emphasis on legislative findings to include the importance of
providing rigorous and relevant high school curricula to New Mexico’s students and ensuring that
students have accurate, useful information about the quality of their high school preparation and
post-secondary options
The bill eliminates the current high school graduation examination by July 2010, and requires
that before the 2008 legislative session, the Public Education Department (PED) establish by rule
a new graduation assessment or portfolio system for use beginning in school year 2010-2011.
In addition, SB 561 directs PED to create a readiness assessment system for all New Mexico
public high school students no later than the 2008-2009 school year. This new material would
create a substantial new assessment to be administered by the PED. It requires that during the
fall of each school year, the assessment system, while aligned with New Mexico academic
content standards will:
Assess high school readiness in English, reading, mathematics and science in the fall of grade
nine.
Assess college readiness in English, reading and mathematics and “locating" information in
the fall of grade 10.
Assess workplace readiness in applied skills in reading, mathematics and “locating"
information in the fall of grade 11.
All students will participate in the assessment at no cost for the first administration in each grade
level, however SB 561 provides that districts may charge students the cost of the administration
should the students choose to re-take any of the assessments. The bill also mandates that results
from these assessments shall be made available to students, parents and public schools no later
than four weeks following the date on which the assessments are administered.
At present students in a limited number of schools are being assessed using the Work Keys
assessment with federal Carl Perkins funding being used cover the cost of the assessment.
SB 561 provides that a school-age person must attend public, private or home school until they
are 18 years of age, unless they have graduated or received a general educational development
certificate (GED.) Additionally, SB 561 provides that a school or charter school may not exempt
a student from attending school for any reasons except those provided by law or parent-
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Senate Bill 561/aSEC/aSFC – Page
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authorized medical reasons. It appears that the intent of these provisions is to make it more
difficult for students to drop out of school prior to graduation. Research shows that students who
complete high school earn more money and are more likely to complete post-secondary
education than those that do not.
SB 561 increases rigor for students by requiring algebra I be offered in the eighth grade, provides
that students entering ninth grade in the 2009-2010 school year, in order to graduate, must earn at
least one unit as advanced placement, dual credit, or one distance learning course. Further, the
bill creates the New Mexico diploma of excellence, sets out the course requirements and
provides for certificates of completion for those students who do not meet graduation
requirements.
SB 561 further provides that funds contained in the Public School Reading Proficiency Fund can
only be distributed only to middle, junior and senior high schools to implement scientifically
based reading programs including the Middle and High School Literacy Initiative provided for in
the bill. This provision would eliminate elementary schools from having access to the fund.
While it is important to focus on literacy skills at all stages of a child’s education, research has
shown that early literacy interventions have the most effect. By eliminating elementary schools’
access to this fund, early intervention programs may be adversely impacted.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The Office of Educational Accountability notes that existing statute indicates that students will
be tested in social studies by the 2005-06 school year, should the legislature provide funding. SB
561 strikes existing language which indicates that students will be tested in social studies upon
provision of funding from the legislature. Removal of this language would mean the
requirement of the implementation of social studies assessment in grades 3-8 & 11. The social
studies component of the assessment is currently under development at the PED, however, the
PED Assessment and Accountability staff indicate that only the grade 11 assessment will be
available by the 2007-08 school year. Clarification needs to be made about whether the sponsor
intends for the social studies component of the New Mexico Standards Based Assessment to
come on-line for all effected grades in 2007-08, or whether some graduated roll-out is allowable
HED also notes that under provisions contained in SB 561, a student under 18 years of age
cannot drop out of school unless he/she has graduated from high school or received a General
Educational Development (GED) certificate. However, federal law mandates that a student
cannot receive a GED unless he/she has officially withdrawn from high school. A student
therefore cannot obtain a GED while enrolled in high school. The impact of SB 561 is that a
student under 18 years of age who drops out of high school will be unable to officially withdraw
or earn a GED.
A question for consideration is whether the reading proficiency fund duplicates the purposes of
the reading materials fund.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Higher Education Department notes that provisions relating to graduation requirements
contain a clause giving students and their parents the opportunity to opt out of the mathematics
requirement required to earn a New Mexico Diploma of Excellence. According to national
research, success in Algebra II is a good predictor for success in college and the skills needed for
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Senate Bill 561/aSEC/aSFC – Page
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success in college/careers are the same. It is notable that students and parents are presented the
opportunity to opt out of only the math requirement, not any of the other core content area
requirements.
PA/mt:yr